🔻 Wedge Chart Patterns: When Price Takes a Breather
A Wedge pattern forms when two trend lines converge, indicating that price swings are getting smaller.
This pattern usually means the market is pausing—traders are undecided, and price action is tightening up like a coiled spring.
There are two types of wedge patterns:
-
Falling Wedge ➜ typically bullish
-
Rising Wedge ➜ typically bearish
Interestingly, both wedge types can act as either reversal or continuation patterns, depending on where they appear in the trend.
📉 Rising Wedge: Bearish Signal Ahead
A rising wedge forms when price moves between two upward-sloping lines — support and resistance.
Key features:
-
The support line is steeper than the resistance line.
-
This shows that higher lows are forming faster than higher highs.
-
As price tightens within the wedge, it signals a potential breakout — often to the downside.
📌 If a rising wedge forms after an uptrend, it usually indicates a bearish reversal.
📌 If it forms during a downtrend, it may suggest the trend is simply taking a break before continuing lower — a bearish continuation.
🖼️ Example: Rising Wedge After an Uptrend
In this scenario, price forms new highs, but at a slower pace compared to the rising lows.
Eventually, the support line breaks, and price drops — signaling sellers have taken control.
The size of the price drop?
Roughly the same as the height of the wedge formation!
🖼️ Example: Rising Wedge as Continuation
In this case, the wedge forms within a downtrend.
Price temporarily moves upward with higher highs and higher lows — but once support breaks again, the downtrend resumes.
The drop? Once again, about the height of the wedge.
That’s why the rising wedge is a bearish pattern no matter where it appears!
📚 So far, we’ve learned:
-
Rising wedge after an uptrend = trend reversal (bearish)
-
Rising wedge during a downtrend = trend continuation (still bearish)
📈 Falling Wedge: Bullish Signal in Disguise
A falling wedge is the mirror image of the rising wedge.
Price moves between two downward-sloping lines:
-
The resistance line is steeper than the support line.
-
This shows that lower highs are forming faster than lower lows.
📌 When found after a downtrend, the falling wedge often signals a bullish reversal.
📌 When found during an uptrend, it typically signals a bullish continuation.
🖼️ Example: Falling Wedge as Reversal
Here, price was in a downtrend, forming lower highs and lows.
Once price breaks above the resistance line, it surges upward, usually by the same height as the wedge — sometimes even more!
🖼️ Example: Falling Wedge as Continuation
In this case, price was already in an uptrend but then paused and consolidated into a falling wedge.
Buyers took a breather… but once the price broke above resistance — boom! The uptrend resumed.
A smart trader would place an entry order just above the wedge’s top trend line.
Once triggered, you ride the uptrend, aiming for a profit target equal to the wedge’s height.
🎯 Want to go for more pips?
Secure partial profits at your target, then let the rest of your position ride the wave!
🔑 Key Takeaways:
-
Wedges indicate market indecision and tightening price action.
-
Rising wedge → bearish (downward breakout likely)
-
Falling wedge → bullish (upward breakout likely)
-
Both can be reversal or continuation patterns based on where they appear in a trend.
When you spot a wedge, get ready.
The market’s just been stretching… and it’s about to make its next big move. 🚀
